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At least 25 killed in Donetsk strike as Russian gas producer Novatek suspends terminal operations

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At least 25 people have died in a marketplace after Ukrainian forces shelled the Russian-controlled city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, local officials said on Sunday.

A further 20 people were injured in the strike on the suburb of Tekstilshchik, Denis Pushilin said, the head of the Russian-installed authorities in the city.

He said the shells had been fired by the Ukrainian military, though Kyiv has not commented on the incident.

“The market was attacked on Sunday, when it is busiest,” said Mr Pushilin said. 

Donetsk fell under the control of pro-Moscow separatists in 2014, and was formally annexed by Russia in 2022.

It has been regularly targeted by Kyiv’s forces since the beginning of the conflict in 2022.

Russia suspends gas terminal operations

Russian gas producer Novatek said work at a terminal it controls on the Baltic Sea had been suspended following a fire it said was the result of “external influence”.

The fire broke out on Sunday at the terminal belonging to Russia’s largest liquefied natural gas producer, regional officials said.

“According to preliminary information, the fire was the result of external influence,” the company said in a statement.

“The technological process at Novatek-Ust-Luga has been stopped, and an operational headquarters has been established to eliminate the consequences. Damage assessment will be carried out later.”

Firefighters work to extinguish fire at the Novatek terminal in the port near the Baltic Sea. (Reuters: Leningrad governor Alexander Drozdenko’s Telegram channel)

The Novatek complex, located on the Gulf of Finland about 170 kilometres west of St Petersburg, processes stable gas condensate into fuel and oil, with the port shipping the products to international markets.

There were no casualties, the Leningrad regional governor said. 

Russian news outlet Shot reported local residents had heard a drone operating nearby, followed by several explosions.

St Petersburg-based news outlet Fontanka said at least two drones were spotted in the sky flying towards the city before the terminal caught fire.

The Interfax-Ukraine news agency, citing unnamed sources, said the fire was the result of a special operation carried out by Ukraine’s security services.

There was no immediate comment from Ukraine, and the claim could not be independently confirmed.

Russia and Ukraine have targeted each other’s energy infrastructure throughout the latest conflict, in an attempt to disrupt each other’s supply lines and logistics.

On Friday, a drone attack hit an oil depot in Russia’s western region of Bryansk, bordering Ukraine.

It came a day after an attack on a Russian Baltic Sea oil terminal, which Russian officials said was unsuccessful.

Russia takes control of north-east Ukrainian city

Further north, Russian forces took control of the village of Krokhmalne in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, Russia’s Defence Ministry said on Sunday.

Some 45 people lived in the village before the war began in 2022. 

It is about 30 kilometres south-east of the regional hub of Kupiansk, an important railway junction which Russian forces have been pushing to take over.

Ukrainian land forces spokesman Volodymyr Fitio said the capture of the village had “no strategic importance”.

“These are five houses”, he said during an interview, adding Ukrainian forces were still holding the front line.

In recent days, Ukrainian authorities in the north-east Kharkiv region had urged residents to evacuate, citing worsening Russian attacks in the area.

Reuters/AFP

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